ChatGPT maker OpenAI has delayed the launch of its custom
GPT store until early 2024, according to an internal memo seen by Reuters on
Friday.
During its first developer conference in November, OpenAI
introduced the custom GPTs and store, which were set to be launched later that
month.
The company is continuing to "make improvements"
to GPTs based on customer feedback, the memo said.
The delay comes against the backdrop of the startup's
surprise ouster of its CEO Sam Altman and his subsequent reinstatement
following threats by employees to quit.
The GPTs are early versions of AI assistants that perform
real-world tasks such as booking flights on behalf of a user. It is also
expected to allow users to share their GPTs and earn money based on the number
of users.
Last month, OpenAI announced it intends to work with
organisations to produce public and private datasets for training artificial
intelligence (AI) models.
Popular chatbot ChatGPT, which can generate poems and prose
from simple prompts, is based on large language models that are trained
entirely on open-source data available on the Internet.
The company's latest effort could help it produce more
nuanced training data that are more conversational in style.
"We're particularly looking for data that expresses
human intention, across any language, topic and format," the company said
in a blog post.
OpenAI said it is seeking partners to help it create an
open-source dataset for training language models. This dataset would be public
for anyone to use in AI model training, it said.
The company said it is also preparing private datasets for
training proprietary AI models.
© Reuters